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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
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Reep, Diana C.; Dambrot, Faye H. – Journalism Quarterly, 1987
Provides in-depth content analysis of six 1985-86 prime-time television shows which featured single professional women sharing the lead with a male partner in a working relationship. Concludes that these programs show a less stereotypical portrayal of working women than in the past and demonstrate a serious attempt to present the problems of…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Programing (Broadcast), Sex Role
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Seidman, Steven A. – International Journal of Instructional Media, 1999
This study was a replication of one that investigated sex-role stereotyping of occupations and behaviors of music video characters shown on MTV (Music Television) in 1987. It employed a random sample of 91 MTV music videos broadcast in 1993, and found a continuation of male and female characters shown in sex-typed jobs. Contains 56 references.…
Descriptors: Characterization, Gender Issues, Popular Music, Sex Role
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Mayes, Sandra L.; Valentine, K. B. – Journal of Broadcasting, 1979
Explores the role children's cartoon programs may play in forming sex role identities in children through the presentation of sex-typed personality attributes of the cartoon characters. Fourteen dependent variables of cartoon character personality were analyzed by sex of the character and sex of the viewer. (JVP)
Descriptors: Cartoons, Childrens Television, Commercial Television, Media Research
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Haskell, Deborah – Journal of Broadcasting, 1979
Investigates the image of the contemporary American woman as currently presented on television through viewing approximately 34 hours of programing and recording the following characteristics: regularity of character, occupations of characters, general demographics, and themes and topics discussed. (CWM)
Descriptors: Broadcast Television, Characterization, Commercial Television, Females
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Reep, Diana C.; Dambrot, Faye H. – Journalism Quarterly, 1989
Investigates the effect of television viewing on perceptions of sex-role stereotypes. Finds partial support for both the high impact image (the "Drench") and the frequent viewing ("Drip, Drip") theories. (RS)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Mass Media Role, Sex Role, Sex Stereotypes
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Ruble, Diane N.; And Others – Child Development, 1981
Presents a cognitive-developmental analysis of the effects of televised, sex-stereotypic information on children's behavior and attitudes towards toy play. Subjects were 100 children, ages four to six divided into groups exhibiting high and low gender-constancy. (Author/CM)
Descriptors: Self Concept, Sex Role, Sex Stereotypes, Television Commercials
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List, Judith A.; And Others – Child Development, 1983
Assesses third-grade children's comprehension of traditional and nontraditional female sex-role portrayals in television programs. For both programs, children demonstrated accurate memory for role-relevant information, but children with higher levels of sex-role stereotyping remembered less role-relevant information than did children with lower…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Memory
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Barbatsis, Gretchen S.; And Others – Communication Quarterly, 1983
Identified patterns that characterized soap operas, cartoons, and prime-time drama: (1) the predominant form of interaction was dyadic; (2) the most frequent speakers and receivers of messages were males; (3) the most pervasive message was an assertion of dominance; and (4) the concept of power was not sex-linked. (PD)
Descriptors: Cartoons, Content Analysis, Females, Individual Power
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Brinson, Susan L. – Argumentation and Advocacy, 1992
Studies the behaviors of women and men represented in interpersonal arguments in prime-time television dramas. Finds a weak link between actual argument behaviors and those on television, thereby socializing viewers in a manner inconsistent with reality. Suggests that television arguments are guided more by the needs of the medium that a need to…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Conflict, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
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Durkin, Kevin – Communication Research: An International Quarterly, 1984
Investigated how children (ages 4 to 9) perceive stereotypes in television programs. Found that they use their existing knowledge of traditional sex roles to account for activities both witnessed and presupposed. Concludes that children make informed judgments about television sex roles by referring to their developing scripts of social life. (PD)
Descriptors: Children, Interviews, Mass Media Effects, Programing (Broadcast)
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Chu, Donna; McIntyre, Bryce T. – Communication Research Reports, 1995
Finds that male characters outnumbered female characters by a ratio of 2:1, but that female characters enjoyed far greater representation in cartoons produced in Japan than in cartoons produced in the United States and Great Britain. Shows that characters conformed to gender-related stereotypes, with males being more aggressive, rough, sloppy, and…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Childrens Television, Communication Research, Content Analysis
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Shaw, Jeffrey S. – Small Group Behavior, 1980
Although the roles of Archie Bunker and Ralph Cramden were quite similar, those of Edith Bunker and Alice Cramden in their reactions to similar strong personalities were quite different. Results suggest that one's role depends on individual personality structure and personality structures of group members. (Author)
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Group Dynamics, Interaction Process Analysis, Interpersonal Attraction
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Ditsworth, Dahlia – New Jersey Journal of Communication, 2001
Presents a literature review that addresses sexism and gender misrepresentation on "Sesame Street," the world's most popular children's television program. Discusses the show's content and the correlation between increased exposure to "Sesame Street" and viewers' changes in attitude and behavior. Suggests the presence of gender…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Behavior Change, Elementary Education, Higher Education
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Lemon, Judith – Journal of Communication, 1977
Reports on study of intersex and interrace dominance patterns in prime time television focusing on two-person interactions between men and women, Blacks and Whites, to determine if one person dominates or if two parties interact as equals. Relates sex and race dominance patterns to several program and character variables. (JMF)
Descriptors: Blacks, Characterization, Females, Interaction
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Steinke, Jocelyn; Long, Marilee – Science Communication, 1996
Describes a study that examined the portrayals of female characters on four educational science television series for children and discusses those portrayals in the light of other research on television and socialization. Topics include children's perceptions of occupational sex roles; theories of sex-role development; and implications for future…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Childrens Television, Educational Television, Females
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